Time travel in fiction
Time travel is a common theme in fiction, mainly since the late 19th century, and has been depicted in a variety of media, such as literature, television, film, and advertisements.[1][2]
The concept of time travel by mechanical means was popularized in H. G. Wells' 1895 story, The Time Machine.[3][4] In general, time travel stories focus on the consequences of traveling into the past or the future.[3][5][6] The central premise for these stories often involves changing history, either intentionally or by accident, and the ways by which altering the past changes the future and creates an altered present or future for the time traveler upon their return home.[3][6] In other instances, the premise is that the past cannot be changed or that the future is predetermined, and the protagonist's actions turn out to be either inconsequential or intrinsic to events as they originally unfolded.[7] Some stories focus solely on the paradoxes and alternate timelines that come with time travel, rather than time traveling itself.[5] They often provide some sort of social commentary, as time travel provides a "necessary distancing effect" that allows science fiction to address contemporary issues in metaphorical ways.[8]
Mechanisms
Time travel in modern fiction is sometimes achieved by space and time warps, stemming from the scientific theory of general relativity.[9] Stories from antiquity often featured time travel into the future through a time slip brought on by traveling or sleeping,[10] or in other cases, time travel into the past through supernatural means, for example brought on by angels or spirits.[4][11]
Time slip
A time slip is a plot device in fantasy and science fiction in which a person, or group of people, seem to travel through time by unknown means.[12][13] The idea of a time slip has been used in 19th century fantasy, an early example being Irving Washington's 1819 Rip Van Winkle, where the mechanism of time travel is an extraordinarily long sleep.[14] Mark Twain's 1889 A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court had considerable influence on later writers.[15]
Time slip is one of the main plot devices of time travel stories, another being a time machine. The difference is that in time slip stories, the protagonist typically has no control and no understanding of the process (which is often never explained at all) and is either left marooned in a past or future time and must make the best of it, or is eventually returned by a process as unpredictable and uncontrolled as the journey out.[16] The plot device is also popular in children's literature.[17][18]
Communication from the future
In literature, communication from the future is a plot device in some science fiction and fantasy stories. Forrest J. Ackerman noted in his 1973 anthology of the best fiction of the year that "the theme of getting hold of tomorrow's newspaper is a recurrent one".[19] An early example of this device can be found in H.G. Wells's 1932 short story "The Queer Story of Brownlow's Newspaper",[19][20] which tells the tale of a man who receives such a paper from 40 years in the future. The 1944 film It Happened Tomorrow also employs this device,[19] with the protagonist receiving the next day's newspaper from an elderly colleague (who is possibly a ghost). Ackerman's anthology also highlights a 1972 short story by Robert Silverberg, "What We Learned From This Morning's Newspaper".[19] In that story, a block of homeowners wake to discover that on November 22, they have received The New York Times for the coming December 1.[1]: 38 As characters learn of future events affecting them through a newspaper delivered a week early, the ultimate effect is that this "so upsets the future that spacetime is destroyed".[1]: 165 The television series Early Edition, inspired by the film It Happened Tomorrow,[21] also revolved around a character who daily received the next day's newspaper,[1]: 235 and sought to change some event therein forecast to happen.
A newspaper from the future can be a fictional edition of a real newspaper, or an entirely fictional newspaper. John Buchan's 1932 novel The Gap in the Curtain, is similarly premised on a group of people being enabled to see, for a moment, an item in The Times newspaper from one year in the future. During the Swedish general election of 2006, the Swedish liberal party used election posters which looked like news items, called Framtidens nyheter ("News of the future"), featuring a future Sweden that had become what the party wanted.[22]
A communication from the future raises questions about the ability of humans to control their destiny.[1]: 165 The visual novel Steins;Gate features characters sending short text messages backwards in time to avert disaster, only to find their problems are exacerbated due to not knowing how individuals in the past will actually utilize the information.[23][24][25]
Precognition
Precognition has been explored as a form of time travel in fiction. Author J. B. Priestley wrote of it both in fiction and non-fiction, analysing testimonials of precognition and other "temporal anomalies" in his book Man and Time. His books include time travel to the future through dreaming, which upon waking up results in memories from the future. Such memories, he writes, may also lead to the feeling of déjà vu, that the present events have already been experienced, and are now being re-experienced.[26] Infallible precognition, which describes the future as it truly is, may lead to causal loops, one form of which is explored in Newcomb's paradox.[27][28] The film 12 Monkeys heavily deals with themes of predestination and the Cassandra complex, where the protagonist who travels back in time explains that he can't change the past.[29]
Time loop
A "time loop" or "temporal loop" is a plot device in which periods of time are repeated and re-experienced by the characters, and there is often some hope of breaking out of the cycle of repetition.[30] Time loops are sometimes referred to as causal loops,[29][30] but these two concepts are distinct. Although similar, causal loops are unchanging and self-originating, whereas time loops are constantly resetting. In a time loop when a certain condition is met, such as a death of a character or a clock reaching a certain time, the loop starts again, with one or more characters retaining the memories from the previous loop.[31] Stories with time loops commonly center on the character learning from each successive loop through time.[30]
Themes
Time paradox
The idea of changing the past is logically contradictory, creating situations like the grandfather paradox, where time travelles go back in time and change the past in a way that affects their own future, such as by killing their own grandparents.[32][33] The engineer Paul J. Nahin states that "even though the consensus today is that the past cannot be changed, science fiction writers have used the idea of changing the past for good story effect".[1]: 267 Time travel to the past and precognition without the ability to change events may result in causal loops.[29]
The possibility of characters inadvertently or intentionally changing the past gave rise to the idea of "time police", people tasked with preventing such changes from occurring by themselves engaging in time travel to rectify such changes.[34]
Alternative future, history, timelines, and dimensions
An alternative future or alternate future is a possible future that never comes to pass, typically when someone travels back into the past and alters it so that the events of the alternative future cannot occur,[35] or when a communication from the future to the past effected a change that alters the future.[1]: 165 Alternative histories may exist "side by side", with the time traveller actually arriving at different dimensions as he changes time.[36]
Butterfly effect
The butterfly effect is the notion that small events can have large, widespread consequences. The term describes events observed in chaos theory where a very small change in initial conditions results in vastly different outcomes. The term was coined by mathematician Edward Lorenz years after the phenomenon was first described.[37]
The butterfly effect has found its way into popular imagination. For example, in Ray Bradbury's 1952 short story A Sound of Thunder, the killing of a single insect millions of years in the past drastically changes the world, and in the 2004 film The Butterfly Effect, the protagonist's small changes to their past results in extreme changes.[38]
Time tourism
A "distinct subgenre" of stories explore time travel as a means of tourism,[4] with travelers curious to visit periods or events such as the Victorian Era or the Crucifixion of Christ, or to meet historical figures such as Abraham Lincoln or Ludwig van Beethoven.[34] This theme can be addressed from two directions. An early example of present-day tourists travelling back to the past is Ray Bradbury's 1952 A Sound of Thunder, in which the protagonists are big game hunters who travel to the distant past to hunt dinosaurs.[4] An early example of the other type, in which tourists from the future visit the present, is Catherine L. Moore and Henry Kuttner's 1946 Vintage Season.[39]
Time war
The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction describes a time war as a fictional war that is "fought across time, usually with each side knowingly using time travel ... in an attempt to establish the ascendancy of one or another version of history". Time wars are also known as "change wars" and "temporal wars".[40] Examples include Clifford D. Simak's 1951 Time and Again, Barrington J. Bayley's 1974 The Fall of Chronopolis, and Matthew Costello's 1990 Time of the Fox.[1]: 267
Ghost story
Researcher Barbara Bronlow wrote that traditional ghost stories are in effect an early form of time travel, since they depict living people of the present interacting with (dead) people of the past. She noted as an instance that Christopher Marlow's Doctor Faustus called up Helen of Troy and met her arising from her grave.[41]
See also
- Eternal return
- Future history
- List of games containing time travel
- List of time travel works of fiction
- Time viewer
- Time travel in The Lord of the Rings
References
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- ^ Nahin, Paul J. (2011). Time Travel: A Writer's Guide to the Real Science of Plausible Time Travel. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. ix. ISBN 9781421401201.
- ^ a b c Sterling, Bruce (3 May 2016). "Science fiction - Time travel". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
- ^ a b c d Kuiper, Kathleen (2012). Prose: Literary Terms and Concepts (1st ed.). New York: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. pp. 63–64. ISBN 9781615304943.
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- ^ a b Flood, Alison (23 September 2011). "Time travel in fiction: why authors return to it time and time again". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
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- ^ Redmond, Sean (2014). Liquid Metal: the Science Fiction Film Reader. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-231501842. Retrieved 30 September 2015.
[...] the time travel motif also has an ideological function because it literally provides the necessary distancing effect that science fiction needs to be able to metaphorically address the most pressing issues and themes that concern people in the present.
- ^ Stephen Hawking (1999). "Space and Time Warps". Retrieved 20 February 2016.
- ^ Fitting, Peter (2010). "Utopia, Dystopia, and Science Fiction". The Cambridge Companion to Utopian Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 138–139. ISBN 978-0-521-88665-9.
- ^ Alkon, Paul K. (1987). Origins of Futuristic Fiction. Athens: University of Georgia Press. pp. 95–96. ISBN 978-0-820309323.
- ^ Anders, Charlie Jane (12 June 2009). "Timeslip romance". io9. Retrieved 27 August 2015.
- ^ Palmer, Christopher (2007). Philip K. Dick: Exhilaration and Terror of the Postmodern (Reprint ed.). Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-853236184. Retrieved 11 February 2017.
- ^ Lee, Maggie (12 April 2016). "Film Review: 'A Bride for Rip Van Winkle'". Variety. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
- ^ James, Edward; Mendlesohn, Farah (2002). The Cambridge Companion to Fantasy Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 106. ISBN 9781107493735. Retrieved 11 February 2017.
- ^ Schweitzer, Darrell (2009). The Fantastic Horizon: Essays and Reviews (1st ed.). Rockville, Maryland: Borgo Press. p. 112. ISBN 9781434403209. Retrieved 22 September 2017.
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- ^ Young, R. G. (1997). The Encyclopedia of Fantastic Film: Ali Baba to Zombies. New York: Applause. p. 318. ISBN 978-1-55783-269-6.
- ^ Jonsson, Gunnar (29 June 2006). "Fp [Folkpartiet] satsar på löpsedlar som valaffischer" [FP [The People's Party] focuses on headlines as election posters]. Dagens Nyheter (in Swedish). Retrieved 9 September 2015.
- ^ 秋葉原に時間の扉が開かれる 『シュタインズ・ゲート』 [The gate of time can be opened at Akihabara, "Steins;Gate"] (in Japanese). Famitsu. 13 June 2009. Archived from the original on 21 October 2012. Retrieved 1 November 2009.
- ^ Ishii, Senji (15 October 2009). 時間という禁断のテーマに挑んだ本格派ノベルゲーム『シュタインズ・ゲート』インプレッション [Impressions of "Steins;Gate", a novel game about the forbidden topic of time] (in Japanese). Famitsu. Archived from the original on 13 November 2009. Retrieved 7 November 2009.
- ^ "Steins;Gate". Famitsu (in Japanese). Enterbrain: 231. June 2009.
- ^ Price, Katy (December 2014). "Testimonies of precognition and encounters with psychiatry in letters to J. B. Priestley". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences. 48: 103–111. doi:10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.07.006. PMID 25176614.
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- ^ a b c Chelsea Quinn Yarbro. "Time Loop". The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. Retrieved 2015-10-18.
- ^ Jones, Matthew; Ormrod, Joan (2015). Time Travel in Popular Media: Essays on Film, Television, Literature and Video Games. McFarland & Company. p. 207. ISBN 978-0-786478071.
- ^ Langford, David. "Time Paradoxes". The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
- ^ Swartz, Norman (October 31, 1993). "Time Travel: Visiting the Past". Norman Swartz - Biography. Simon Fraser University. Retrieved February 20, 2016.
- ^ a b Stableford, Brian (2006). Science Fact and Science Fiction: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge. p. 534. ISBN 0415974607.
- ^ Prucher, Jeffrey; Wolfe, Gene (2007). Brave New Words: The Oxford Dictionary of Science Fiction. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-0-195305678. Retrieved 4 January 2016.
- ^ "Journeys in Space and Time". Cosmos: A Personal Voyage. Episode 8. November 16, 1980. Event occurs at 36 minute mark. PBS.
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- ^ Peter Dizikes (June 8, 2008). "The meaning of the butterfly". Boston Globe. Retrieved May 31, 2016.
- ^ Bova, Ben (2003). "Introduction". The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume Two (1st ed.). New York: Tor Books. pp. ix-xi. ISBN 978-0-765305343.
- ^ Langford, David. "Changewar". The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
- ^ Bronlow, Barbara H. Petrovna, Natalia; Cougland, George C.; Ramirez, Juan Mario (eds.). Workshop on the Ongoing Impact of Ancient Myth on Contemporary Culture: 146–148.
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Further reading
- Gleick, James (2016). Time Travel: A History. Pantheon. ISBN 978-0-307908797.
External links
- Timelinks - the big list of time travel video, film, and television - over 700 films and television programs featuring time travel.
- Time-Travel Fiction - Big list of adventures in time travel.
- Andy's Anachronisms - Exploring the themes of time travel and alternate universes in literature and entertainment.